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A dark, isolated room with police crime scene tape, a detective examining human bone remains, psychological analysis charts on the wall, and a table with chilling evidence and forensic tools.

Cannibalism

Understanding the rare, but horrifying crime and its deep psychological roots

Cannibalism in true crime: A rare, yet profoundly disturbing act. Delve into the psychology, motives, and the horror that accompanies the ultimate taboo.


Understanding the rare, but horrifying crime and its deep psychological roots


Cannibalism in true crime: Why is it the ultimate taboo?


In true crime, cannibalism refers to the horrific act where an individual consumes the flesh or organs of another human being. In a true crime context, cannibalism differs significantly from the rare survival situations known throughout history. In criminal cases, however, cannibalism is often linked to deep psychological disturbance, perverted ritualistic acts, extreme sexual sadism, or an ultimate form of exerting power and dehumanizing the victim. Although cases of criminal cannibalism are extremely rare, they evoke a particular degree of horror and morbid fascination, precisely because they radically challenge our most fundamental taboos and the boundaries of human behavior.


Why are cannibalism cases hard for investigators to solve?


The investigation of cases involving cannibalism is typically extremely complex and emotionally draining for all parties involved, including police and forensic pathologists. Developing an offender profile in cannibalism cases places significant demands on investigators' understanding of complex psychological phenomena such as paraphilias, severe psychopathy, and other serious mental disorders, as the motive is rarely straightforward. Such cannibalistic acts may represent the culmination of a series of escalating violent acts, possibly committed by a serial killer, or they may be directly triggered by specific, distorted sexual fantasies or obsessions that the perpetrator has harbored for a long time. Gathering evidence in cannibalism cases can also be exceptionally difficult, as the cannibalistic act itself often leaves few direct traces, especially if the body has been disposed of or destroyed in ways specifically intended to conceal this component of the crime.


How does cannibalism challenge our understanding of evil?


Cannibalism as a criminal act forces society to confront the absolute darkest and most disturbing recesses of the human psyche. Although the occurrence of criminal cannibalism is extremely limited, these rare but shocking cases underscore the importance of gaining a deeper understanding of the extreme psychological deviations and forms of sadism that can lead to such transgressive and brutal violence. They raise fundamental questions about the nature of evil, the limits of acceptable human behavior, and the complex psychological mechanisms that can drive an individual, possibly with psychopathic traits, to commit the ultimately unthinkable: to consume another human being.


Did this pique your interest? Explore the harrowing cases of cannibalism that reveal deep psychological disturbance and extreme sadism. Find our compelling cases below.

Posts Tagged “Cannibalism”

7 posts
Armin Meiwes - Kannibalen fra Rotenburg
CaseMay 7, 2026

The Rotenburg Cannibal: Inside Germany's Most Disturbing Crime

In March 2001, a 43-year-old engineer from Berlin traveled to a small German town and became the voluntary victim of one of Europe's most grotesque crimes. Armin Meiwes, a computer repair technician living in Rotenburg, had posted an advertisement seeking someone willing to be consumed—and he found his victim online.

CannibalismArmin MeiwesGermany+5
Armin Meiwes — Der Kannibale von Rotenburg
CaseMay 7, 2026

The Rotenburg Cannibal: Inside Germany's Darkest Crime

On March 2001, Armin Meiwes, a 39-year-old computer repair technician from Wüstefeld, Germany, murdered and cannibalized Bernd Brandes, a 43-year-old engineer from Berlin, in what would become one of Europe's most disturbing criminal cases.

Armin MeiwesRotenburgCannibalism+3
Mørkeland podcast — episode 334 — The Joe Metheny case in Baltimore
Podcast EpisodeMarch 16, 2026

Joe Metheny: The Cannibal Cook of Baltimore

Joseph Roy Metheny operated as a serial killer in Baltimore during the 1990s, claiming to have murdered up to ten people. Known as 'Joe the Cannibal' and 'The Cannibal Cook,' Metheny was convicted of two murders and died in prison in 2017, leaving a trail of unproven confessions and alleged victims.

MørkelandRadioPlayBaltimore+15
A figure resembling Albert Fish stands outside a New York City apartment building in the 1930s, dressed in period attire.
CaseJune 6, 2025

Albert Fish: The Gray Man Who Hunted Children

Albert Fish, born in 1870, murdered at least three children between 1924 and 1928, including 11-year-old Grace Budd, whose dismembered remains he cannibalized. Arrested in 1930 and convicted in 1936, Fish claimed to have killed over 100 children across America before his execution.

Serial killerCannibalismChildren+30
A figure resembling Armin Meiwes sits alone at a kitchen table, an empty plate and cutlery before him, the freezer door slightly ajar revealing packages wrapped in butcher paper.
CaseJune 6, 2025

Armin Meiwes: Inside the Rotenburg Cannibal Case

In 2001, Armin Meiwes, a computer repair technician from Rotenburg, Germany, killed and consumed Berlin engineer Bernd-Jürgen Brandes after the two connected through an online advertisement. The case shocked Europe and raised unprecedented legal questions about consent and murder.

Armin MeiwesBernd BrandesRotenburg+3
A figure resembling Richard Trenton Chase stands in front of a dilapidated Sacramento apartment building, casting an eerie presence over the scene, evoking the chilling atmosphere of his reign of terror in the late 1970s
CaseJune 6, 2025

The Vampire of Sacramento: America's Most Deranged Serial Killer

Between December 1977 and January 1978, Richard Trenton Chase murdered six people in Sacramento, California, driven by delusional beliefs that he needed to consume human blood to survive. His crimes—marked by shooting, mutilation, necrophilia, and cannibalism—became the stuff of law enforcement legend.

Serial killerPsychopathyCannibalism+17
The Keepers reveals the Catholic Church's darkness
TV SeriesMay 26, 2025

The Keepers: Netflix's Deep Dive Into a Nun's Unsolved Murder

On November 7, 1969, Catherine Cesnik, a 26-year-old nun and English teacher at Archbishop Keough High School in Baltimore, Maryland, disappeared. Her decomposed body was discovered two months later, and decades afterward, Netflix's 'The Keepers' would expose a dark conspiracy of abuse and potential cover-up.

ChurchFamilicideAbuse+18